[Swprograms] RA Previews #666; 22-26 Mar '04
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[Swprograms] RA Previews #666; 22-26 Mar '04



RADIO AUSTRALIA PREVIEWS
Edition 666
Mar. 22-26, 2004

Days and times are in UTC. An * indicates that a program is produced by Radio Australia. All others are produced by Radio National or by other ABC Radio networks as indicated. Further information about these programs, as well as transcripts and on-demand audio files of particular programs, and a wealth of supporting information can be obtained from
<http://www.abc.net.au>. Additional information and a key to abbreviations and symbols used appear at the bottom of the page.


---------------------------

Weekdays
(RA or ABC News every hour on the hour)

0010 -
Tue.: THE SCIENCE SHOW - with Robyn Williams. This week: "Mars or Clitoris? The Nation Must Decide". Why go to Mars? Nobel Laureate Doug Osheroff says it costs too much - US $1 Trillion. Professor Paul Davies says we should go and with a one-way ticket. Laura Molino says she won't go and instead we should fund a centre for the study and mapping of the clitoris. [%]
Wed.: THE NATIONAL INTEREST - Terry Lane looks at the major issues of the year. This week: "Latham in the Styx". Lane reviews Opposition Leader Mark Latham's visit to Tasmania's old growth forests. Terry will be joined by independent Senator Shayne Murphy, who quit the ALP prior to the last federal election in protest at the Labor Party's policies on logging. Senator Murphy is a former forestry union official in Tasmania who argues for a middle way between wood-chippers and conservationists. He says timber should be extracted selectively and used for high value purposes, rather than clear-felled and exported for pulp. Also, Australia's role in opening up Indonesia's protected forests to mining and the latest push to unify our defamation laws. [%]
Thu.: BACKGROUND BRIEFING - Radio National's agenda-setting, current affairs radio documentary program. This week: "China on the Move". One of the greatest social shifts in modern history will be undertaken in China over the next decades as 500 million rural people head for the towns and cities. Yuen Chan reports from Shanghai. [T;%]
Fri.: HINDSIGHT - social history with Jennifer Bowen. This week: "The Parallel Worlds of TGH Strehlow". Between 1932 and 1968, linguist Ted Strehlow collected the songs, myths, and legends of the Aranda people from Central Australia. His translations of their songs and stories into English, was published in his major work, the "Songs of Central Australia". This Hindsight explores the interior life and the public world of Ted Strehlow. [%]


0110 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
0130 -
Mon.: HEALTH REPORT - with Maryke Steffens. This week: "Psychiatrists--Sex with Patients". Another prominent psychiatrist has been struck off for having sex with his patients. What will it take to stop this happening? We hear from experts and those who have dealt with such cases and are highly critical of the profession. [T;%]
Tue.: LAW REPORT - with Damien Carrick. This week: "Stopping Spam; Billable Units; Proposed National Defamation Laws". New Australia-wide legislation aimed at stopping spam is about to come on line; but what real impact will this have on your clogged in-box? Also - how lawyers charge for their services. Are 6 minute billable units fair on consumers or lawyers? And a look at moves by the Federal Attorney-General to create national defamation laws. [T;%]
Wed.: RELIGION REPORT - with Stephen Crittendon. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/relrpt/> for details. [T;%]
Thu.: MEDIA REPORT - with Mick O'Regan. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/mediarpt/> for details. [T;%]
Fri.: THE SPORTS FACTOR - with Warwick Hadfield. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/sportsf/> for details. [T;%]


0210 -
THE WORLD TODAY - the ABC's comprehensive lunchtime current affairs program. [T]


0310 -
SPORT*
0320 -
LIFE MATTERS - a daily interview program about social change and day-to-day life in Australia. [%]


0410 -
MARGARET THROSBY - in conversation with a special guest, playing their favourite music and telling their own stories. <http://www.abc.net.au/classic/throsby/#promo> for details. (from ABC Classic FM) [%]


0510 -
PACIFIC BEAT* - daily afternoon magazine for the Pacific with Sport at 0530. [T;%]


0610 -
SPORT* - reports and scores.
0620 -
Mon.: OCKHAM'S RAZOR - sharp talk about science. This week: "Coral Reefs - The Global Canary". Coral bleaching is relatively new as a cause of massive death of corals. 1998 was the hottest year on record for a thousand of years and the heat had an unexpected consequence. That summer was also the time when the stress and death of coral appeared on a scale never seen before, through coral bleaching. Dr Rosaleen Love who lectures at Monash University and La Trobe in Melbourne, examines the Townsville Document, drawn up in October 2002 by a group of coral reef scientists which outlines the ecological problems together with some prescriptions for solutions. [%]
Tue.: IN CONVERSATION - Robyn Williams talks to scientists and those interested in the subject, about what science has meant to their lives. This week: Steve Powles is in a race against weeds. Somehow they develop resistance to the weapons we use, some of them chemical, to stop plants competing with crops. Professor Powles, from the University of WA is trying to fathom the genetic basis for resistance and to stay one step ahead. He is also head of GTAC – the body supervising Australia’s genetic engineering efforts. [%]
Wed.: LINGUA FRANCA - about language. This week: "What Language Did Jesus Speak?" In Mel Gibson's film, "The Passion of the Christ", the Romans speak Latin and the Jews speak Aramaic. Ian Young, who teaches Aramaic at Sydney University, discusses whether this was in fact the language of Jesus. [%]
Thu.: THE ARK - Rachael Kohn talks to some of the world's leading religious historians and authors about curious moments in religious history that shatter the usual perception of the past and illuminate the present. This week: "W.B. Yeats--Poet and Magus". The occult involvement of W.B. Yeats was a sustaining element of his life and poetry, yet scholars have largely downplayed it. We examine the ideas and practices that gave his poetry a layer of meaning often hidden to the reader. [T;%]
Fri.: THE MAKERS - Julie Copeland interviews artists, composers and craftspeople. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/sunmorn/makers.htm> for details. [%]
0635 -
Mon.: HIT MIX* - presented by Brendon Telfer. Find out what we're listening to in Australia and what we're giving to the world in our brand new look at the Australian music scene.
Tue.: MUSIC DELI - international music.
Wed.: JAZZ NOTES* - presented by Ivqn Lloyd.
Thu.: OZ COUNTRY STYLE - from ABC Local Radio.
Fri. - THE CHAT ROOM* - presented by Heather Jarvis. The place to meet people from the region living lives a little out of the ordinary. From business, to sport, science and the arts. Community leaders and quiet achievers. They drop in, share their stories and play a bit of music in Radio Australia’s Lounge.


0710 -
PACIFIC BEAT* - daily afternoon magazine for the Pacific with Sport at 0730. [T;%]


0810 -
	PM - the ABC's comprehensive early evening current affairs program. [T]

0905 -
AUSTRALIA TALKS BACK - a daily national talkback program that's a forum for the discussion of a specific topic with the involvement of expert guests, Radio National specialists and listeners. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/austback/> for details. [%]
Mon.: Renewed Violence In Kosovo. After a period of relative calm, ethnic violence between Serbs and Albanians has broken out in Kosovo. Dozens of people have been killed and homes and churches have been attacked. So what does this re-emergence of tensions mean for the Balkans?


1005 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]

1105 -
SPORT - reports and scores.
1110 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
1130 -
BUSH TELEGRAPH - rural and regional issues around Australia. (Digest version of the full program broadcast daily at 1605.)


1205 -
Mon.-Thu.: LATE NIGHT LIVE - Phillip Adams hosts a discussion of current events in politics, science, philosophy and culture. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/lnl/> for details. [%]
Fri.: SOUND QUALITY - For 25 years, Tim Ritchie has been seeking out music: the interesting, the evolutionary, the inaccessible and the wonderful. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/music/soundqlt/> for details and playlists. [T;%]


1305 -
THE PLANET - Lucky Oceans with jazz, blues, folk styles, art music and more in a show artfully arranged for radio. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/music/planet/> for playlists and further details. [T;%]
Mon.: “Kora Blues” is a beautiful & unusual set of largely-improvised instrumental duets. Englishman Kevin Brown is essentially a bluesman & a very fine slide guitarist. Moussa Kouyate - a hereditary musician from Senegal – is a master of the West African harp-lute, the kora. Also in this show (whilst we eagerly await his second album due later this year), we hear some beautiful fingerstyle acoustic guitar from “Memory of Praise”, the much-hailed debut CD by Alec Stone Sweet.
Tue.: Choice low notes from the higher latitudes: “Reduce Speed” is the new CD by saxophonist John Högman. A veteran Swedish jazz saxophonist, he’s also a fine composer, is lyrical, subtle & has a sense of humour. On this CD – for the first time in a small-group album of his – Högman plays baritone saxophone exclusively. His three much younger colleagues play very nicely, too. Like many others over the last hundred-and-something years (we’ll explain in the show), John has been duped about a certain alleged “traditional Irish folk song”. He nonetheless covers it beautifully!
Wed.: Today’s featured albums show how very alive in Scotland is so-called “traditional” music. “Glad Company” is the debut CD by Anna Massie, who’s equally fine as guitarist/fiddler, interpreting tunes old & new, including her own. Anna was still a teenager in January 2003 when she won BBC Radio Scotland’s “Young Traditional Musician of the Year” Award. On her album she’s sometimes her own orchestra & sometimes joined by two other talented young Scotswomen. Anna's zest is as striking as her dexterity. “A Thousand Miles Away” is the third CD by the Shetland quartet, Filska, whose three female members are all excellent fiddlers, & cover piano & accordion too. Andrew Tulloch plays very tasteful guitar. Filska plays originals & other tunes old & new, with uncommon elegance & lyricism. It’s a band of gifted arrangers as well as players. These CDs are both the fruit of a love of “traditional” music which is deep, but not exclusive.
Thu.: “I dig everybody who plays with soul” declares guitarist Mike Stern. He’s always “liked that vocal sound on my guitar”. So it makes perfect sense that Stern works so well with vocalists. They – in particular, the silken-toned Richard Bona from Cameroon – are a key presence on Stern’s new CD, “These Times”. Given Stern’s “play from the heart” approach, the vocal quality is always there, even on the purely instrumental numbers. Ever since his big break with Miles Davis in 1981, Stern has been a guitar hero in both “jazz-as-such” and “fusion” circles. Musically, his new album is sometimes “hot”, sometimes “cool”. It’s always warm-hearted.
Fri.: “Tortured-with-a-twist-honky-soul-twang” is one description (Glenn O’Brien’s, in Andy Warhol’s Interview Magazine) of Canadian songster Cris Cuddy. He keeps good company: guitarists Albert Lee & Andrew Hardin & multi-instrumentalist Fats Kaplin are among the players on Cuddy’s new CD. “Keep The Change” is the title on the front. “Nowhere Town” says the back: yes, it's a double-album of original songs. Cuddy (alias – in other musical circumstances – “Jeremy Dormouse” & “Max Mouse”) is sardonic but definitely not heartless. Reviewer Jeremy Searle greeted his latest offering as “the kind of wonderful sprawl Ryan Adams might have made if he wasn’t busy pissing his talent away trying to be a rock star.


1405 -
SPORT
1410 -
PM - with Mark Colvin. A comprehensive current affairs program which backgrounds, analyses, interprets and encourages debate on events and issues of interest and importance to all Australians. [T;%]


1505 -
	SPORT - reports and scores.
1510 -
	ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
1530 -
	REPORT programs (refer to 0130)

1605 -
BUSH TELEGRAPH - rural and regional issues around Australia with Michael Mackenzie. This week, "Olives to Eucalypts" is featured from Monday, tracing the history of Italian migration to the Murrimbidgee Irrigation Area in southern NSW. The series celebrates the contribution made by Italian immigrants to one of Australia's greatest agricultural regions. [%]


1705 -
	AUSTRALIA TALKS BACK (refer to 0905)

1805 -
Fri.: PACIFIC REVIEW - the best of the previous week's PACIFIC BEAT.
1810 -
Mon.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - focuses in on the island nations which depend on the Pacific Ocean for their existence, drawing on Australian based reporters and correspondents throughout the region. With headlines at 1829 and sport at 1830. [T;%]
1835 -
Mon.-Thu.: ON THE MAT* - Where the Pacific comes together to chat and discuss issues of regional interest.
1830 -
Fri.: COUNTRY BREAKFAST - Australia beyond the urban fringe. [T;%]
1835 -
Mon.-Thu.: THE BEST OF BREAKFAST - A roundup of the best stories from Radio National's Breakfast programme with Peter Thompson. <www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/brkfast/> for details. [%]


1905 -
Fri.: RURAL REPORTER - the people and places that make up country Australia.
1910 -
Mon.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - continued from 1810 with headlines at 1929 and sport at 2030.
1930 -
Fri.: AUSTRALIAN COUNTRY STYLE - Aussie country music with John Nutting.


2005 -
Fri.: ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310)
2010 -
Mon.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - continued from 1910 with headlines at 2029 and sport at 2030.
2030 -
Fri.: THE BUZZ (refer to 2330 Thu.) [%]


2105 -
Fri.: VERBATIM - oral histories with David Mark. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/history/verbatim/> for details. [T;%]
2110 -
Mon.-Thu.: AM - ABC Radio's flagship current affairs program setting the day's news agenda with concise reports and analysis from correspondents around Australia and around the world. [T;%]


2130 -
Mon.: EARTHBEAT - environmental issues raised by economic development with Alexandra de Blas. This week: "Feeding the World". It may come as a surprise that rural NSW is home to the world's most productive and scientifically advanced rice growing industry. But it comes at a high price in terms of water use. In this International Year of Rice, we hear how rice farmers struggle to reconcile environmental responsibility with the demands of making a living. [T]
Tue.: INNOVATIONS* - Showcasing Australian invention, enterprise and ingenuity. <http://www.abc.net.au/ra/innovations/default.htm> for details, audio and further info on the products highlighted. [T;%]
Wed.: IN THE PIPELINE - This thirteen part radio series goes beyond the current hype surrounding digital technology to examine the challenges and opportunities it creates for Australia and the Asian region. This week: "4--Electronic Empires". Now that the digital pipeline can carry sound, vision and text, there’s been a rush by moguls like Rupert Murdoch to take control of both the content and distribution of the entertainment and information industries. Seven huge global empires including News Corp, Sony and Walt Disney now boast control of broadcasting, film-making and publishing. And it’s not only the traditional media industries which are being consumed by these conglomerates, but new IT industries such as Internet Service Providers (ISP’s). Will this result in a homogenisation of culture on a global scale or might it regenerate local cultures as a response to globalisation? [T;%]
Thu.: ALL IN THE MIND - a foray into the mental universe, the mind, the brain and human behavior with Natasha Mitchell. This week: "The Cruel Power of Silence", Part 1 of 2. Ostracism, rejection, social exclusion, bullying, the silent treatment - their power to undermine our confidence and well-being is enormous but rarely discussed openly. Over
two weeks, Natasha Mitchell speaks to the leading international experts spearheading research into the psychology of these cruel phenomena. [T;%]
Fri.: IN CONVERSATION - Robyn Williams talks to scientists and those interested in the subject, about what science has meant to their lives. This week: "Nick Webb". They were Douglas Adams’s initials. DNA. Which may explain why the arts graduate had such an abiding and even expert knowledge of science. He even gave paid lectures in Silicon Valley. Nick Webb, who’s just written a delightful biography of Adams, tells some yarns about the big bloke, how he lived, and why his death was such a loss. [%]


2205 -
Fri.: ASIA PACIFIC WEEKEND EDITION [T;%]
2210 -
Mon.-Thu.: AM - (repeat of 2110)
2230 -
Fri.: SATURDAY AM - ABC's Saturday morning news magazine. [T;%]
2240 -
Mon.-Thu.: AUSTRALIA WIDE - a roundup of "home" news from ABC Newsradio.


2305 -
Fri.: COUNTRY BREAKFAST (refer to 1830)
2310 -
ASIA PACIFIC - current events in the Asia Pacific region. [T;%]
2330 -
Mon.: THE EUROPEANS - broader historical and cultural perspectives on European societies. This week: "The Politics of Justice". Last week marked the beginning of the first major war crimes trial in Serbia since the end of the Bosnian-Serb war of the 1990s. Quite a significant event, considering that the Serbian government has often been blamed for not doing enough to bring alleged war criminals to justice. The national court in Serbia is the first in a series which will eventually replace The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in the Hague. The Hague process has been criticized for being a toothless tiger that hasn’t done enough to bring key players like Serbian leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic before the Courts. But international justice it seems, is a political quagmire. Rumours abound that Karadzic and Mladic have made a deal with western governments, NATO forces are hampered by protocol, and it's all too easy for suspects to be hidden by sympathetic locals. [%]
Tue.: RURAL REPORTER - the people and places that make up country Australia.
Wed.: THE ARTS ON RA - Julie Copeland interviews artists, composers and craftspeople and Julie Rigg looks at the movies. <http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/sunmorn/> for details concerning possible segments carried in this program, as the program is an
abridged version of the "Sunday Morning" program that is broadcast on ABC Radio National. [%]
Thu.: THE BUZZ - technology understandably explained. This week: "Secret Codes".
Cryptography - the process of making information unintelligible and converting it back again - is not just for spies. It underpins much of our lives. Banking, retailing, data
management and communication are all big users of cryptography. [%]
Fri.: HIT MIX* - presented by Brendon Telfer. Find out what we're listening to in Australia and what we're giving to the world in our brand new look at the Australian music scene. [T;%]


How to Listen to Radio Australia----
Via shortwave:
Best noted in eastern North America - (Please note that reception of RA in eastern NA in local evenings during the current winter has been less reliable than recent years' experience.)
2100 - 0000 UTC: 21740 (irregularly heard)
0000 - 0200 UTC: 15240 [17580 also noted] (occasionally heard)
0200 - 0700 UTC: 15515 (occasionally heard) [17580
and 17750 also noted (heard rarely)]
0700 - 0800 UTC: 15240 (heard rarely) [17580 and 6020 also noted
(occasionally heard)]
0800 - 1400 UTC: 9580 (reliable) [6020 and 9590 also noted (reliable)]
1400 - 1600 UTC: 9590 (reliable)
Best in UK as reported in Shortwave Magazine (further reports from
readers in the UK/Europe welcomed):
0530 - 0800 UTC: 21725, 17750, 15415
0800 - 1100 UTC: 21820, 21725, 17750, 15415
1100 - 1400 UTC: 21820, 11880
1400 - 1700 UTC: 11660, 9475
1700 - 1900 UTC: 9475
1900 - 2130 UTC: 9500
2200 - 0000 UTC: 13620
(Complete worldwide schedule from
<http://www.abc.net.au/ra/schedule/default.htm>.)
Via Internet audio streaming:
from <http://www.abc.net.au/ra/audio/englishlive.htm>
Via World Radio Network:
<http://www.wrn.org/listeners/stations/station.php?StationID=50>
Via CBC Overnight:
<http://cbc.ca/overnight/>
Via satellite:
consult <http://www.abc.net.au/ra/hear/america.htm>
Via the Mobile Broadcast Network, which offers WRN
<http://www.myMBN.com>


Symbols Used:
Within brackets by each program listing, % denotes that the listed
program is available as an on-demand audio file via the Internet. T
indicates that a printed transcript of the program is available via the
RA or via an ABC domestic network Internet site. Consult
<http://www.abc.net.au/streaming/audiovideo.htm> or the particular
program's web page.

To be updated by Wed. 0500 UT.

Good Listening!
John Figliozzi


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